Welcome to the revolution, folks. On the very first day of incoming Secret Service Director Sean Curran's tenure, the agency is undergoing the kind of purge that should have happened ages ago. Curran, the man who heroically shielded President Trump from an assassin's bullet in Butler, Pennsylvania, is not here to play nice. He's here to fix what's broken, and boy, is there a lot to fix.
Sean Curran, known for his loyalty and guts, was the head of Trump's personal security detail, a role where he managed to keep the President safe under some of the most dire circumstances. Now, he's stepping into the director's shoes, and he's not wasting any time. According to my sources, Curran has already put 5-10 senior leadership officials on notice: pack your bags, move to a new desk, or take the gold watch route to retirement.
Among those in the hot seat is none other than former Acting Director Ron Rowe. This is the guy who, despite being told to clear out his office, seemed to cling to his position like a barnacle on the hull of a ship. Rowe, who's been acting director since Kimberly Cheatle resigned in disgrace after the Butler assassination attempt, has been playing musical chairs with his office furniture, refusing to accept his fate.
But the real bombshell? The information blackout before the Butler rally. It turns out, Cheatle, Rowe, and David Torres, the assistant director of Strategic Intelligence and Information, didn't share critical threat intel with Curran or anyone on the ground. Torres, by the way, is supposed to be the brain behind keeping our leaders safe, but he's more like the mastermind of keeping them in the dark.
Then there's Cynthia Sjoberg Radway, the Chief Operating Officer, who was as tight with Cheatle as two peas in a pod. Radway, who got a cushy bonus to come back and work under her friend Cheatle, is seen as a major obstacle to Curran's reform. She's the kind of person who could turn the Secret Service into Cheatle's personal intelligence network, leaking information faster than a sieve. Her removal, according to insiders, is essential to avoid her being the "major roadblock to positive progress."

The lack of communication about threats before the Butler rally is what truly horrifies me. If Curran and his team had known, they could have beefed up security, potentially saving lives and avoiding the national embarrassment that followed. This wasn't just incompetence; it was negligence at the highest level.
Curran's mission is clear: dismantle the old guard, those who've turned a blind eye to threats and failed the American people. This isn't just a shake-up; it's a much-needed exorcism of the bureaucratic demons that have haunted the Secret Service for too long.
Stay tuned, because this story is far from over. The house cleaning has just begun, and if Curran plays his cards right, the Secret Service might finally return to its former glory, where the safety of our leaders isn't just a campaign promise, but a reality.
This story is still developing, so it will be updated when new information when available.
This wasn't negligence or incompetence. It was intentional, an attempt to get Trump killed. Rather than shuffle the perps, firings and charges should be happening. Without severe punishment there is no deterrent.
The rot at SS is similar to the rot of the entire national government.